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~~ EDCLIFF REVIEW 


Volume 27 


oh ne “Tce aye 


7 
_ = 


OUR SLOGAN: An Industrial Metropolis of Undusttlous People Who. Pull Together, 


THE REDOCLiFF REVIEW, 


Town Council 
Regular Meeting 
Monday Sept. 25 


Council Protests Sale Tar 


_ On Natural Gas 
..The regular bi-monthly Coun- 
c!l meeting was held in the Town 
Hall on Monday evening Sept. 
“5th. with the Mayor and ali 
Councillors present. 

The School Board’s request for 
$1900 for eurrent expenses was 
ordered paid. 

The cash statement for August 
as submitted by the Secretary 
was accepted. 

A delegation from Quarry Lod 
ge waited upon Council re lear 
ing building for the coming 12 
months. Satisfactory arrange 
ments were made. 

Several accounts as passed by 
the finance committee were order 
ed paid. 

The returning officer's re- 
port on the recent vote taken on 
the Electricity by-law was r»- 
ceived 

A letter from the Union of Al- 
berta Municipalities relative t: 
the imposition of a provi» a) 
sales tax to be used for eduction 
4) purposes was read. 

The Counc!l went on record as 
opposed to this proposed tara- 
tion. 

Council forwarded a letter of 
protest to the Minister of Nation 
al Revenue, Ottawa, regarding 
the bales tax on consumption of 
natural gas for domestic par 
[v-8e8. . a & t An 


School Field Sports 
Carried Out Friday 


Weather Man Proves Unkind 
Fair Crowd Turned Out 


The Local Annual School Pleld 
Day which was to Nave taken 
place last Wednesday, was post- 


poned until last Friday, when the 
different sporting events were 
carried out on the School Play- 
grounds. 

The weather was not what i 
should have been for the occasion 
the spectators finding it quit 
chilly, which detracted somewha* 
from the enthusiasm. 
was muck 
enjoyed was the refreshment tent 


One feature which 


vhere hot dogs and pop were a- 
vailable. 


THURSDAY, OCT. 5th 1930 


SOVIET FOSTERING BALKAN BLOC 


ui ; ae 


te 


5 Wilh 


3 an 


~ 


ye 


ougertaale wilt ‘are Ww way at foe | ats represe 
ntatives of several of the Balkan States are conferring with Sovi 


et officials. 


The map shows the Balkan area and its relation to 
both Russia and Western Europe 


Wedding Bells 


The following is a list of the 
events and the winners,— -. JOHNSON— MOFADZEN -. 
Robert Pedersen with a total| A quiet wedding was solemniz- 
of 17 points, the greatest number |¢4 on Thursday, Sept, 28th. at 
obtained for the day, won the| First United Church, Vancouver, 


Broadfoot medal. He also won 
the award for the Best Intermed- 
iate School Athlete. 
made the mile in 5 min. 16 sce. 
Muriel Hitchen, 16% points. 
Wilma Marty with 16 points 
won the award for the Best Ele- 
mentary School Athlete. 


when Janet, youngest daughter 


of Mrs. A. MeFad#en and the 

Robert | late A. Me.Fadzen of Redcliff, 
became the bride of Clinton 
Johnson of Vancouver. 


The bride was attended by her 
sister Isobel, and the groom by 
Alex Dalziel, the ceremony being 


Annie Baier and Nick Baier performed by Rev. Andrew Rod- 


tied with 13 points each. 
Evelyn Fulton with 12 points 


don, 
The bride looked charming in 


won the award for the Best High |#" @fternoon dress of white 


School Athlete. 
George Skidmore ‘was among 
the winners with 12 porn: 


Do You Re Remember? 


. ~ a Fa aap A ee eae 
Teele’ Ae rt Events of Twentyfiye Years Ago |” 


It has always been a wet 
known fact, that in times of war 
or peace, the best way for any 
community to attain its objective 
is by pulling together for th» 
common cause, with all its re. 
sources pooled as it were. 

‘lhe Review has always been «of 
this opinion and for 25 years has 
yiven its whole hearted support 
to any and every worthy cause, 
vith such resources as it had at 
its disposal and by giving t> 
such causes unstinted publicit; 
through its columns, free of any 
charge. 

Among those causes which the 
Review -has supported so gener: 
ously for so many years in good 
times and bad is the Red Cross 
Society. 

Is it not only reasonable to ex 
pect that when it is possible. 
these generous gestures on our 
part should be returned in kind? 
Courtesy for courtesy is an 
accepted rule of modern society?) 

Judge of our surprise then, 


when we find the newly organis | 


Leal Red Cross Society cireular- 
izing the town with type written 
information, which we would 
have gladly printed inthe Re- 
view... again free of charge, and 
tickets for a needle work raffle, 
vhich we did not print, ani 
which, if we had teen given the 
opportunity to print, would have 
cost NO more than they did cow 
Here was an opportunity to re- 
turn the courtesy of many years’ 
standing, which was passed by. 
If this discourtesy was due to 
any personal animosity on the 
part of any member of the Fin- 
ance Committee, we have only 
this to say, that the Red Cross 
Society, which stands always fo: 
kindness and helpfulness, the 
world over, is a very vgauitabl. 


From the Review Files Oct. 1914 |° 


The battle of the Aisne is still 
raging with great loss of life. 
x 

The Redeliff Shoe Factory has 
orders for $40,000 worth of shoes 
The staff ‘will be inerreased and 
will tarn out 200 pairs a day. 

. * a 

The first church ¢o be built n 
Redeliff, S.Ambrose, is nearing 
completion. The church will 
be opened on Dee, 3rd. by the 
Bishop. Mr. Husband of the 
Rolling Mills donated a fine flag 
staff, and Mr. Corson of the Orn- 
amental Iron Works donated a 
set of -heavy ornamental iron 
hinges and handles of old design, 
for the main doors, A hand- 


sanctuary and choir ‘4s being 
made by Mr, W, Cox: 


medium through 
one’s spleen. 


This picture. was taken. at East Sussex Agricultural College,. Plumpttoen, near Lewen, where- 
members of the Women's Land. Army receive training before going to various farms. --In this. 
ploture the girls are. hoeing 4 root crop in a very beau tifu) setting. -..... ...... -..-- 


particular 


some set of furniture for the| 


which to vent | 


chiffon with matching accessories 


The bridesmaid wore mauve 
with matching accessories. 
“After (ie ceremony, the wed 1- 


3 ig party went to the home of 


the bride’s sister, Mrs. J. McKay 
the bride’s sister, Mrs. J, MeKay 
poe a dainty supper was serv- 

The young couple will re- 
de in Vancouver. 


Recruits Wanted 


The Armouries at Redcliff will 
be open on Monday and Wednes- 
day nights for the purpose of en 


listing recruits into ‘‘C’’ Co, of 
the Ist. S. A. R. Militia 

Here is an opportunity for all 
men between the ages of 18 and 
45 to brush up 'f they have had 


previous military training, and 
to train in military duties if pre- 
vious training is lacking. 
Men enlisting in this unit are 
not required to serve overseas 
wiless further contingents are to 
be sent. In this case re-enlist- 
met will be necessary and of 
e will beon a voluntary 
wis Reeruits into the militia 
at this time be called upon 
for home def ~if an emer 
gency arose. 
the unit is reruited up to 
‘courses Will be 
N, C. O's which will be conduct 
ed in such a manner as to ae 


\ i | 


THE CINDERELLA SHOP 


NEXT TO COOK'S 


JEWELERY STORE. 


« Wishes to Announce a 30 Day 


SA 


L.-E 


We Ask You to Come in and See Eor Your Self. 
Bargains - Bargains - Bargains 


Rack No.1 Dresses reg. $7.95 for - = = - 
Rack No.2 Dresses reg. $5.95 for - - - - - 


- $3.95 
$2.95 


One Rack Has Been Reduced for the 


FESTIVAL ONLY 


$1 


95 


The New Winter Coats are Arriving Daily. 
The Finest English Imports and Best Quality 
Furs at Moderate Prices. 


WOMEN HELPING BRITAIN. W1 WIN THE WAR 


aed Elsewhere 


Local Scouts Busy At Mew 
Scout Quarters 
The Local Seouts are busy 


these days fitting up the upper 
floor of the Broadway Depart- 
ment Store, to be used as their 
meeting place during the winter 
months. 

Former world’s heavyweight 
bexing champion, Gene Tumney, 
has been elected to the Executive 
Board of the Boy Scout Founda. 
tion of Greater New York, 


A summer visitor to Canada 
was Juke Waterman, a Dutch 
Boy Scout from near Amsterdam 
who came across to meet Saska 
pen pals’’ with whom he 
had been corresponding for some 
years. 

OF 9 vey A CLIT ME © 

A new kind of good tarn came 
the way of Scouts on duty this 
at the Ottawa fall fair— 
the fixing. of ladies’ high heely 
loosened while tramping about 
the grounds, 


toon 


year 


One hundrel Calgary Boy 
Scouts, brought in a body, acted 
as caddies at Banff’s summer 
Golf tournament. 

The resourceful Boy Scouts of 
Wadena, Sask. this summer 
‘“hoed their way'’ to camp. By 
arrangement with a iocal farmer 
the troop lined up with hoes and 


Mr, Bassett, General Manager 
for the Dominion Glass Co. is a 


business visitor in town today. 
ere 


atives for a time. 


[SERS 
qua'nt everyone with the latest 
military practice and tactics. 

It is felt that there are many 
men in Redeliff who will wel- 
come this opportunity of prepar- 
ing to do their bit for the Empire 
providing they are called upos 
to do so. Here is the opportun- 
ity to at least start in that diret 
ion and every effort will be made 
to see that each recruit is proper 
iy trained and given an opportun 
ity to qualify acgording to his 
ability. 

J..R. Mackenzie, 
Acting Captain 
CO” Coy. Ist 8. A. R. Redeli‘t 


naan een 


Number 65 


IScout Activities Here {Car Licenses 


Cost Less Oct. 1 


First reduction of passenger o* 
pleasure car licenses this year 
will take effect Oct. 1st. aecord- 
ing to information which officials 
of the Alberta Motor Association 
bave received from the provine- 
ial secretary's department. 

To those taking out motor 
licenses on or after Oct. 1, there 
will be a 40 percent reduction on 
the annual license fee. The 
license will expire nnext Mar. 31 
Licenses for motor trucks were 
reduced by 40 percent on Sept. 1 


and hold good unt!]l the end of 
next March. 
Next Jan. 1, there will be a 75 


percent reduction in passenger 
ear and motor truck licenses, so 
that cars may be operated in the 
first three months of 1940 at one- 
quarter. of the annual license fee. 
Government officials also have 
announced that up to the end of 
September, there will be a 30 per 
cent rebate on the passenger car 
license fee if plates are turned 
in by that time, or 20 percent on 
plates returned to the depart- 
ment by Jan. 10 next. A rebate 
of 20 percent on truck licenses 
is allowed up to Jan. 10. 
a 


Help of Citizens Solicited to Keep 


John Balmer, Arthur Harris, 
Ted Harris, Oswald Sween. Ge». 
Kitchen, Jock MecFadten, Tom 
Kwasniak, Gordon Newnham, 
Bruce Collard, Eli Shaw, John 
Rose, Norris Lawson, Ted Law. 
son, Ted Maskell, Tom Jones*. 
J. Houghton, Jim Dutton, Ted 
Fairburst, W. A. Groves, Jim 
Jackson, Jack Learmonth, Johu 
Madsen, Orland Marty, M. Wasi: 
lewski, Harold Lenning,* Jack 
Murray, Tom Migneault* Arnold 
Hurlburt* Jim Locay* 

Johnnie Davies* 

Those having a star after their 
names were not successful in the 
Medical Exam!nation but should 
be noted as having offered their 
services to thelr country. 


Annual Shopping Festival 
3 Days Oct. 5th 6th & 7th 


During this Period We are Offering For 


CA 


A Discount Off the Marked Price of 


10% 


Our Entire Range of High Grade Merchan- 
Disposal. 


A.C. Hawthorne & Son Ltd 


284 South Railway Street 


Medicine Hat 


eS 


a ™” right coe oy Saye 2 hinds a ana > TN, F . 


ig 
ea 


Ge ee ee es 


eS cape a 


a 


amy ‘ 


Chantec ler 


CIGARETTE PAPERS 
A War Problem 


Whatever part Canada may be destined to play in the war now rag~) 
ing between Germany on the one hand and Great Britain, Canada France | 


FINER 
MADE 


Seeds For Export 
Canada Has Entered Into Both Pro- 


duction And Export Of Many 


Grass And Clover Seed« 
Canada has come quite defihitely!| 


plants products division makes inter-| 
esting reading, as a number of var- 
jeties, formerly on the ‘import list, 


are now transferred to the export 
side. 
which are still imported, the amounts 
are greatly lessened Alsike clover, 
for example, the production for 1938 
was 7,003,000 pounds, no imports for 
the spring of 1939, but an export of 
4,323,780 pounds from June ist, 1938, 
to June 30th, 1939. In 1938 Canada 
produced 4,052,000 pounds of alfalfa) 
seed and exported 3,267,000 pounds, | 
and imported 490 pounds. 

Sweet clover seed production in 
1938 was 11,820,000 pounds. Had no 
importation and exported 10,528,000 


Even a number of varieties, | 


Con In Serumda 


| Cotony’s Famous Rule About Motor 
Trafic Is Rescinded 

Two of Bermuda's most widely 

known prohibitions—one on motor 


into both production and export of} | cars, the other on woman suffrage— 
many grass and clover seeds and a) | went toppling in the wake of the 
recent isstie of statistics from the! | war 


The assembly passed a bill break~- 
ing the colony's famous rule against 
motor traffic because of war condi- 
tions. The governor may now oper- 
ate motor vehicles of all sorts on 
Bermuda roads for the duration of 
the war. 

It was disclosed also that under 
| the Emergency Powers Act recently 
passed, the governor, now Major 
General Denis Kirwan Bernard, has 
the power to grant woman suffrage, 
for which the women of Bermuda 
have fought fruitiessly but steadily 
for many years 


“Use Purity Flour,” says Purity Maid, 
“Por cakes, pies and pastry—no need be 
‘aid. 


afr 

But more than all else with folks to be 
leh 

Purl Plour makes wonderful bread.” 


PURITY MAID SAYS: 


“If any human being deserves immor- 
tal memory, the inventor of the 
sandwich does. Just what would we 
do without it? It is a cornerstone of 
entertaining. And it is truly amazing 
how many different kinds of sand- 
wiches you can make. Here are a few:’ 


SANDWICH COMBINATIONS 
Raisins and nuts chopped finely and 


moistened with grape juice. Natives Of New Guinea 


».. teeth kept bright 
and attractive with 


and Poland, on the other, the fact (hat Western Canadian agriculture will) pounds. Timothy made a rather poor'| bemeeage eral ms and stems with he hele of * 
be charged with the highly important duty of assisting in the task of sup-| showing as, while production ran to) Grushed Sorcerers Appear To Be Still A Real the he Pp WRIGLEY $s 


plying food commodities to the allied belligerent nations and their armies) 


is quite clear. | Crested wheat grass, however, makes! JOHNNY CAKE Sir Hubert Murray, governor of 

What is not clear, however, is the extent to which and for how long | an excellent showing, production nm-| if cop abortening 1 teaspoon soda Papua, believes that despite 50 years | 
Western Canada will be ¢alled upon or will be able to render this duty a8/ ning to 1,685,000 pounds with an im-| {sg white sugar a the of government and missionary work 
part of its contribution towards the winning of the war. That is dependent port of only 2,505 pounds, but an| 6 salt 1% cups Purity Flour 


upon many factors, such as the length of the war, the bountifulness, or 


4,316,000, imports ran to 4,098,044.) 


export of 610,579. Of awnless brome, | 


maple sugar with thick cream 


on whole wheat or nut bread Power In The Land 


1 cup sour milk oe de cornmeal among the natives of New Guinea, 


METHOD—Cream _shorte add 


oa th edd “a 8 > hol “humbugging sorcerers still are the 
otherwise, of the crop yields while the war is in progress; the extent to| production and export nearly bal- eeeten eee. en a t, Sour ond | eal power tn the tend.” 
which the sea lanes can be kept open for, the conveyance of foodstuffs and) anced. Production was 2,360,500) 40 for 30 minutes. 


the arrangements which the allies can make, or may be forced to make | 
by the exigencies of warfare, to ensure an uninterrupted flow of food sup- | 
plies to their nationals and their fighting forces. 

It would be a bold prophet who would venture to predict specific an- 
swers to some of the questions involved in these at present unknown factors. 
The war, for instance, may be a lengthy conflict, as protracted or more so 
than the “unpleasantness” of 1914-18. On the other hand it may be of very) 
short duration. There are those who are making predictions of the length 
of the war, ranging all the way from twenty weeks to twenty years. The 
most that can be said for them is that they are only guesses, and one man’s 
guess is as good as another's. 

‘ . 
The Immediate Requirement 

This being the case, it is impossible for the individual farmer, or even 
for those ini charge of the nation’s affairs, to devise a long range program 
of production and distribution of agricultural products for the entire duration 
of the war. All that can be done at the present time, is to so order the dis-| 
tribution of the crop just harvested in such manner as to ensure its de- 
livery at such times and such places as to furnish maximum assistance in 
the prosecution of the war and to lay plans for production next year on an) 
adequate scale with a similar objective in view. The former is now the 
problem of the government, and the Canada Wheat Board with the assist- 
ance and co-operation of the wheat pools and others marketing agencies. 

The latter, the question of preparation for, and production of next year's 
crop, is one which will involve the co-operation of the individual farmer 
with the government of the country and the various distributing and mar- 
keting agencies. To what extent the quantity and type of production will) 
be left to the diserétion of the individual farmer and to what extent, if 
any, the exigencies of the national welfare, will warrant or necessitate 
directional measures over production effort on the part of the government 
has not, at the momerit, been announced. 

Whether or not any measure of government control over production is 
assumed, it can be taken fok granted that, as long as @ supreme effort may 
be required in the prosecution of the war with the utmost vigor, the farm- 
ers of the west will give loyal and effective support and a full quota of co- 
operation, even though it entail some sacrifice and the abandonment of 
much cherished plans for the time being. 

. 


* 
Mistakes To Avoid 

Whether, however, the farmer retains full measure of liberty in order- 
ing his production program for the next and subsequent ‘years, or not, it is 
to be hoped that plans laid down will take some qognizance of mistakes un- 
wittingly made during the last war efforts be made to avoid them or, 
if that is impossible, to ameliorate thelr after effects. 

During the last war, it will be remémbered, & great deal of sub-marg- 
inal and marginal land was brought under the plow and seeded to wheat 
in a strenuous effort to meet the requirements of the allied nations for more 
and more food. As a result of this fine effort food that was urgently re- 
quired was forthcoming’ 4s and when needed, and unquestionably the man- 
ser in which farmers responded to the call for an adequate supply of food- 
stuffs played an important part in the ultimate victory, 

Unfortunately, however, after the war, when prices of foodstuffs 
dropped to peace time level, and below, farmers found they had on their 
hands broken land which was no longer profitable to till and seed and, as a 
result, much of this land became harborage for noxious weeds and breed- 
ing grounds for insect pests which infested good lands and polluted good 
crops, and eventually became a problem of serious magnitude. 

If it is again found necessary, in order to ensure the prosecution of the 
war with maximum efficiency, to again use some of these ordinarily un- 
profitable areas to raise bread foods, this subsequent problem should not 
be overlooked when plans are being made. 

Consideration might well be given to the. alternative possibility of in- 
creasing yields on the more profitable land by more widespread use of pure, 
vigorous and healthy seed and the adoption of more scientific methods of 
cultivation, wherever this may be practicable. 

And if that is not deemed sufficient and some marginal and sub marg- 
ina! lands must be used in order that war requirements may be fully met, | 
then some consideration should be given as to the use to which they may 
be put subsequently and immediate plans for their use so modified and| 
ordered that this later contingency may be met without undue loss. i 

In the meantime, however, the proseeytion of the war with the utmost | 
vigor is the first claim on all: of Western Canada and this must be | 
the pyne and imme e objective, me of the sacrifices entailed. 


| for 1938 was around 16c per pound) 


pounds and exports 2,274,504 pounds. 

Unfortunately, this report does not | 
give any idea of the price at which 
these seeds sold. It is known, how-| 
ever, that the price of alfalfa seed) 
and sweet clover from 3c to 4c; and, 
while this price for sweet clover is 
too low for much profit, 16c¢ for al- 
falfa certainly pays. 


Have Sense Of Direction 


Common Toads Return Year After 
Year To Same Pond 

According to the London Listener 
E, G. Boulenger, Curator of Reptiles | 
at the London Zoo, had some queer) 
facts to tell about the common toad.) 
“While the common frog,” he said, 
“lays its egg masses in the first) 
water that is available (sometimes it 
even chances the water that collects! 
in puddles), the methodical toad ex- | 
hibits a quite amazing conservatism. 
It returns year after year to the 
same pond in order to undertake its| 
domestic duties even if there are ap-| 
parently equally desirable ponds be- 
tween its Winter quarters and the 
rendezvous—-which might be over, 
half-a-mile apart. 

These annual cavaicades aré usu- 
ally made in the dark and the toads 
show a truly amazing sense of direc- 
tion, I have shown that by experi- 
ment. Some years ago I filled a 
large bag with toads from a particu- 
lar pond and I turned them loose) 
half-a-mile away. Without excep-| 
tion one and all of them (after a few 
tentative hops) sallied forth towards 
the pond they had been taken from. 
I may say that for the purpose of the 
test I saw to it that there were other 
ponds near the place where I had 
turned them loose. 


SELECTED RECIPES 


LEMON SNOW 


1% cups boiling water 
% cup sugar 
Few shavings lemon rind 
8 Tablespoons Benson's or Can- 
ada Corn Starch 
3 tablespoons cold water 
3 teblespoons lemon juice 
Whites of two eggs 
Make a syrup of water, sugar and 
lemon rind, Boil five minutes. Re- 
move rind. Mix corn starch with cold 
Water; pour gradually into syrup, 
stirring until thick. Cook for 15 
minutes. Remove from heat, add 
Strained lemon juice and fold in 
stiffly beaten egg whites. Blend with 
dover beater; turn into “moistened 
moulds and chill. Serve with Lemon 
Custard Sauce. Six servings. 


| 


GRAHAM NUT MUFFINS 
cup sifted flour 

cup Graham flour 
teaspoons baking powder 
cup sugar 

teaspoon salt 

cup coarsely broken walnut 
meats 

egg, well beaten 

cup milk a 
tablespoons me butter or 
other shortening 


In his annual report the governor 
said “officers complain that the fear 
of sorcery prevents natives from 
assisting them in the arrest of mur- 
derers,” The report also said ‘devil 


GET THE PURITY COOK-BOOK 


a Sr alah beund-sent ‘pectpets for 
pa’ lor 
fe. eaten Cone Canada Plour Mite Co, Limited, 


PURITY 
FLOUR 


Best for all your Baking 


posed airdrome because the natives 
refused to work until they were con- 
vinced by a spectacular fireworks 
display that the devils had been 
driven away. 


Unusual Friends. 


Parrot Did Not Long Survive Death 
Of Persian Cat 

Although parrots and cats are 
natural deadly enemies, the case of 
Polly and Blackie was an exception. 

Both pets of Perry Bauer of New 
Haven, Conn., they became friends at 
first sight four years ago and were 
inseparable companions. 

When Blackie, a Persian, took ill 
and died, Polly grieved for two days, 
refused to eat and finally passed 
away of a broken heart. 

Perry said the parrot was at least 
108 years old and was brought to 
America in 1830 after being found 
aboard a pirate craft in the China 
Sea. 


British Composer 


Arthur Benjamin, Of Royal College 
Of Music, Takes Up Residence 
In Vancouver 

Arthur Benjamin, British com- 
poser-pianist, adjudicator at Cana- 
| dian Musical Festivals in 1935, 1937, 
| and 1939, is taking up residence in 
| Vancouver. 

Mr. Benjamin has been on the staff 
| of the Royal College of Music, Lon- 
| don, for 14 years, and his composi- 
tions are included in the reportoire 
of leading orchestras in Europe and 
America. 

His opera “The Devil Take Her” 
has been produced in London and in eas eee 
Sydney, Australia, Had One Complaint 
It is the custom to ask travellers 

P by the long-distance routes to make 
Joins French Army suggestions for improvements. One 

passenger, on alighting at Croydon 
Baron Robert Rothschild Is Member after a trip from India, was asked 
Of Famous Family for his, He pondered a long time and 

Baron Robert de Rothschild, a/ then said: 
member of the famous Buropean “I think the glass of beer I had at 
banking family, has joined the| Bagdad might have been a bit 
French Army. One of France’s| cooler.” 
wealthiest men, he not only directs 
the Paris branch of the Rothschild 
enterprise but also is the admini- 
strator of two of France's greatest 
railways, a director of several large 
corporations, an art collector, phil- 
anthropist, socialite and horse fan- 
cier, 


The population of Greater Toronto, 
Ontario, has been estimated at 855,- 
235. The city proper has 12 sub- 
urban municipajities. 


The man who invented the modern 
plow, Jethro Wood, whittled his first 
models out of potatoes. 


Men have to be either very bitter 
enemies or very close friends to call 
each other names, 


The Kingdom of Siant has officially 
changed its name to Thailand. 


An Important Study 


trees” hindered a survey of & pro-| Children Should Have Musical Educa- 


tion States Dean Of McGill 

“In children lies the only hope for 
the musical future of this Dominion,” 
says Douglas Clarke, dean of the Mo- 
Gill University Faculty of Music. 

“Hducate the children in music. 
They must be told about music, how 
to listen to it and who made it, 
urges Mr. Clarke, who thinks that 
music may well be incorporated in 
the regular school curriculum, be- 
Meving that the study of music can 
do as much to train the mind as 
Latin, euclid and algebra, and that it 
leaves something of real practical 
value with the student in after life. 

Mr. Clarke believes that in addi- 
tion to lessons and practice, children 
should be given an opportunity of 
hearing constructive talks on musio 
appreciation. For school work, he 
suggests that the gramaphone would 
be invaluable in’ this regard as the 
child could follow the evolution of 
music through a series of records in 
addition to learning to recognize the 
sounds of the various orchestral in- 
struments. 

Mr. Clarke makes @ very earnest 
plea that children should have music. 

“Let them know the one art, which, 
above all others has the power to un- 
fold the unsuspected beauties of 
life,” he urges. 


Some of the materials used in 
construction of a plano are: brass, 
copper, felt, glue, iron, ivory, lead, 
leather, paint, steel, tin, varnish, - 
wood, rubber, and woven cloths, 


An iron mountain in Sweden con- 
tains the largest quantity of high 
grade iron ore in the world, having 
about 70 per cent. pure iron. 


There are places in the Sierra 
Madre mountains, Mexico, where a 
thermometer registers 150 degrees F. 
at noon and 23 degrees at night. 


PARA-SANI 


ENJOY PARTIES 2 
Prepare in advance 

by wrapping with Pare paul 
HEAVY WAXED PAPER 


Order Para pan to-day from your 
neighborhood merchant - 


APPLEFORD PAPER "PRODUCTS LTD. 


Richmond, Virginia, was peopled 
entirely by Scots in an early stage of 
its history 2835 WINNIPEG - REGINA - SASKATOON - - CALGARY - EDMONTON 


A 


Nt ee i tt te is i 


, . * 
* TAD Rees 


REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


Boys’ And Girls’ Farm Clubs 
Are Giving New Leadership 
To Canadian Agriculture 


Clearest Air In World 
mene tions that have so far been held 


Claim Of Western Australia Due To throughout the Dominion this year, 
Geographical Position | no feature has been so outstanding as 

The claim is made by the Western|‘%e work of the Boys’ and Girl’ 
Australia government astronomer] F@tm Clubs. This junior division of 
that the atmosphere over the Perth, C@nadian agriculture is composed of 
Observatory is clearer than that) the many and varied junior farm 
over Any obsetvatory in the world clubs in all the provinces, the pro- 
A statement had been made by an vincial and district grain, potato, calf, 
| English clergyman, the Rev. Alan swine, poultry and other clubs which 
| Whitehorn, that the climate of Perth ®%€ @ll co-ordinated through the 


Democratic NationsBattling 
For A Just Cause And In 
Defence Of Their Liberties 


Will Lend Assistance 


Entire Facilities Of The Salvation | 
Army Placed At Disposal Of 
Government 

The entire facilities of the Salva- 
tion Army of the Canadian territory | 
were placed at the disposal of the 
Federal government for wartime ser- 


It is a moment to pay tribute to 
the leadership which the British and 
French Governments have had dur- 
ing all these harrowing weeks and) 
moriths before the final choice was 
made. 

It is particularly the moment to 
pay tribute to the personal leadership 
of Mr. Chamberlain. No democratic) 
statesman in our time has beer made/ vice by Commissioner George L. 
by circumstance the subject of more) Carpenter, immediately upon his re- 
widespread criticism, the target for turn to Toronto from England where 


In all agricultural faire and exhibi- 


il 


more cruel humor. He has been) he was elected head of the world | was the finest in fhe world medium of the Canadian Council on 

chided for his hesitation, found) forces of the Salvation Army. Wh | “Some years ago,” said the gov- Boys’ and Girls’ Farm Work. 

guilty of a lack of courage. But his! prime Minister Mackenzie King | Wit ernment astronomer, “we were tak-| The reason of the spectacular suc- 
» hesitation is seen now to have been! personally acknowledged the offer Na i ling a series of photographs of the C88 made by the clubs in the com- 


the deeply deserving patience of &| of General-clect Carpenter. A tele- 
man who measured accurately the gram received from Mr. King stated: | 
full, terrible cost of a great war, and | “The Government truly appreciates 
his courage has been equal to the the offer of the Salvation Army to 
cruel test of the occasion. | co-operate in every way possible and | 

Summoned by fate to make 4 your offering the services of your 
choice which was deeply unwelcome) organization at the disposal of the 


petitive lists of the exhibitions is 
readily apparent, for not only have 
the young farmers and farmerettes 
of Canada produced exhibits of the 
highest quality but by their ardor 
and enthusiasm are giving a new 
leadership to Canadian agriculture. 


| heavens, and with the photographic: 
| plates came instructions to expose 
them for ten minutes, We discover- 
ed that with this exposure we were 
getting far too many stars in the pic- 
| ture, and, after a series of experi- 


SHE: “It's scandalous! In Africa fine women are sold for 20 shillings.” 
HE: “Well, a fine woman is worth 20 shillings.” 
—Sondagsnisse Strix, Sweden 


to him, precisely at the moment when 
he was robbed by duplicity of an 
alliance on which he had counted 
heavily if matters came to the worst, 
he has risen magnificently to the re- 
sponsibility of a great decision. 
4 o Ce 0 

Certainly, the British people-——and 
the French people with the British 
cannot fail to have derived strength 
and inspiration from the quality of 
the leadership they have had. 

In this dark hour they are forti- 


was explored before they were called 
upon to make the sacrifice of war. 
They have the satisfaction of know- 
ing that their case is clear before 
the world, and that wherever men 


| 


. 
E 
28 e 
“gelee 


z 
é 


HG 


sg 
FF 


| Army territéries all over the world 


Minister of Defense.” 
Commissioner Carpenter, who was) 
located at headquarters at London, 
England, throughout the Great War, 
is closely familiar with war-service 
organization. Although he does not 
officially assume his duties as General 
until November 1, the war situa- 
tion may mean that he will have 
to return to England to assist Gen- 
eral Evangeline Booth. 
Commissioner Carpenter stated 
that simultaneously with Canada, 


‘Soldier's Pay Higher 


Instead Of Former $1.10 

The pay of troops on active service) 
is higher to-day than in 1914. In-! 
stead of $1.10 a day paid during the 
Great War, soldiers of the non- 
| permanent active militia now being 
called out on active service will re-- 
ceive $1.30. This rate was announced 
by the Defence Department, Ottawa. 
This is the pay of the private 
soldier. If he has dependents fhe 
additional amount payable to his wife 


| 


would plate’ the services of the or- 
ganization at the disposal of the 
Governments for wartime service. It| (or female relative who has been re- 
was anticipated that the Army/| sponsible for the care and manage- 
would serve along the same lines as| ment of his home prior to enlist- 
during the Great War. Even before! ment) is $35 a month. For each de- 
he sailed from England, an initial| pendent child the soldier will receive 
allocation had been set by headquart-| @n allowance of another $12 a month. 
ers for the establishment of huts and| The dependents’ allowance is con- 
a staff organized for ove service, 
the Commissioner stated. 


New Russian Discovery 


Was Used With Success In Flu Out- 
break This Year ; 
One war spectre, another world- 
wide flu epidemic, apparently can be 
prevented by a new kind of Russian 
Snuff. 
It was described in the printed 


wife, or to the female relative who 
cares for his home. 
A dependent son is eligible for the 


! 
a depenednt daughter up to the age 
of 17. These limits do not apply,| 
however, in the case of a child un- 


firmity to provide for his or her own 
maintenance. 


This is made up of the $20 which the 


for the three dependent children. 


Smorodinsteff said. 

One inhalation, lasting 15 minutes, 
and using about a thimblefull of the 
powder was tried on a big scale this 
year in Russia, during areal flu out- 


Scientists Claim It Is A Cause Of 
Surface Cancer 

Too much sun was shown as a 

cause of surface cancer in a study 

. made at John Hopkins University 

and reported to the international 


only mostly prevent- 


and navy developed skin cancers 
seemed to be largely immune to all 


Bride: “Yes, there are two things 
I can make really well, fish-cakes 
and trifie.” 

Bridegroom; “And which is this?” 


The King and Queen have donated 
£7,000 ($28,750) to the Red Cross 
for aid to war wounded. 

The King contributed £5,000, the 


soldier assigns from his own pay of} ists, 
} $1.30 @ Ghy, $35 for his wife, and $36) 4,4 Southern 


' tady, when Her Majesty paid an in- 


j 


~ Easy Set Knitted in One Piece 


Under The Northern Lights 


| Private Now Receives $1.30 A Day! Ancient Ceremonial Eskimo Dances) 4 ystratia's 


Give Way To Modern Jitterbug 

Up under the northern lights of the 
eastern Arctic, in the vicinity of 
Churchill, medicine men of the Bski- 
mo tribes are in a rage, and wailing 
for a return to old traditions. The 
ancient ceremonial dances are giving 
way to the antics of the modern fit- 
terbug. 

Ya gotta be able to truck to get 
anywhere now, say the young blades 
of the frozen north. . 

The annual excursion dance at the 
Hudson Bay port saw scores of 
swarthy Eskimos eagerly learning 
the latest terpsichorean products of 
civilization, while the oldsters glow- 
ered in the background, Very un- 
seemly, they said. No dignity at all. 


tingent upon the soldier assigning) ‘The highlight of the social season) 
$20 a month of his own pay to his) North of 53, the dance was held in| 


the railway freight seds. From all 
directions came all kinds of people. 
Cree and Chippewayan Indians, Bs- 


$12 a month up to the age of 16, and imos, trappers, Hudson's Bay men| 


and their wives, railroad workers, 
mounties, and sailors from the ships 
waiting to take out the grain, all 


able through physical or mental in-! came. 


So hot was the pace that the local 
orchestra was forced to work in two 


On that scale the family of @ pri-| shifts, Between dances incidental, 
_| vate soldier, with a wife and three music was furnished by the sleigh| 


children, would receive monthly $91.| qogs outside the building. 


Attending were 90 American tour- 
some from as far south as Texas 
California, 


“Splendid! What a triumph! 
must tell the King.” 

The remark was made by Queen 
Elizabeth to an old Dumfermline 


formal visit recently to the Black 
Watch Memorial Home at Dunalis- 
yair, Broughty Ferry, Dundee. 

The Queen, after shaking hands 
, with the old visitor to the home, Mrs. 
Peden, of Dumfermline, was told how 
the tree planted in Dumfermline Glen 
_ by the Queen as Duchess of York had 


The practice of government-spon- 
sored public works was known in 
ancient times. 


| Grasshoppers may travel several 


hundred miles within a few days. 


The hardest thing in the world is 


to recondition a worn-out welcome. 


| 
six minutes was sufficient.” 


‘| United States, Capt. Baker said he 


ments, we found that an exposure of 
| There are many projects embodied 
The remarkably clear atmosphere)" the programme of the work of the 
over Perth is because of Western Boys’ and Girls’ Farm Clubs of Can- 
geographical position. ada—live stock, field crops, horticul- 
The prevailing drift of the atmos-| ture, and home economics. As results 
phere was from west to east, after | Of this work, potato production in one 
passing over 5,000 miles of ocean, | area has been revolutionized; in 
the air was entirely free from dust,| ther districts, production of live 
Coupled with this was the fact that) Stock has been raised to a high 
there is no high mountain range Standard and in other areas thou- 
lalong the west coast. There were| 5@nds of bushels of grain have been 
long stretches of ocean in the west) ®dded to production. 
of the South African and. South) Particular examples of excellent 
American land masses, but these; Work were seen at the recent Ottawa 
continents had mountain ranges| Xhibition when 177 boys showed 
which upset the atmospheric condi-| high-quality calves they had acquired 
| tions.—Brandon Sun, and reared as part of their club 
| Te ra work; also at the Lakehead Exhibi- 
| tion at Port Arthur where a young 
Tree Belts |farmer exhibited no less than 11 
Says Western Canada Needs A Pro-|®"!mals and the champion Holstein 
” Sram Of Reforestation COW i aequlred ag © pul of i 
: # calf club work. In A 4 
waite Coane nets constr wheat, approximately "1.38 
series of tree belts which would pre-| pentyl entre rte. dm teens eg nents A 
vent soil drifting and help insure| py petete an a neg stesna 
rainfall—in the belief of Capt. Rich- tered, catinal: ont nro hs 
a In Ontario and other provinces, 
| several fine herds of cattle can trace 
With a party of eight Capt. Baker ist hat 
‘has been touring Canada and United codeine se prt Pia ee 
| States. He visited the United States doing. In short the fine work of the 
it ene Sachldk: nenerber camps. | junior division is being carried out 
errival in Winnipeg, “is to keep your | pen the seem Sg Mt ool 
homes and farms from blowing away. represent an active membership of 
You have seen the gradual drying UP) more than 37,000. and ‘every year 
Saskatchewan, By enlisting an army are 
of young men similar to the C.C.C. 
to plant tree belts across the coun- 
try, much of this could be prevented.” 
After two years of research in the 


| ard St. Barbe Baker, wotld known 
forestry expert. 


discussed with President Roosevelt a 
plan which he put over and which is) 
now saving forests of that country 
and giving employment to 350,000 
young men every year, Mrs, Mary Roebuck, of Attercliffe, 

Capt. Baker and his party are try-| Sheffield, Eng., cannot explain why 


program 
student of the UniversifMV of Sas- 
katchewan before the Great War, he 
has managed the Kenya Colony and 
Nigeria forests on a “sustained 
yield” basis for several years. 


Runs On Coal Gas 


British members of parliament are 
| to see new types of motor car en- 
gines driyen by high-compression 
| coal gas which, it is claimed, operate 
as efficiently as engines driven by 
‘either oil or gasoline, Evolved at 
|works in Ashton-under-Lyne, Eng- 
/land, it is believed the new engines 
| may revolutionize the fuel aspect of 
road transport. 

The importance of the development 
“during war, when supplies of import- 
ed fuel may be precarious, is realized 
in government circles, where a keen 
interest in the new engines is being 


Fish are affected by hot weather! may safe! 


y 


eee. ali SSS I Ee Eat 


pce Mat rae ee 


PalCar sy ted ee git BENT ee Ea 4 ~~ any & 
wet ipe = er: 
_ 


THE REDOLIFF REVIEW, ##$THURSDAY, OCT. 5ih ot 


dentist; dental wechante; dental nurse; telephone: telegraph 01 

dio operation, ‘eode) or technician; typist; secretary; short | 

* strictly independent newspaper, published in the interests * = ; , it ; typist; ¥; 

ol Thursday at . oe hand writer; translator ; intelligener work; censorship: laboratory | 

ae and Mgr m - * Lift, pd Te technician ; surveyor; practical. 

ectibes ase Shell B. L. STONE, PUBLISHER..... .... ......."| -. ._.... (PLEASE PRINT YOUR ANSWERS IN INK) _. 

. SUBSCRIPTION RATES - : : . _ | 

aa ‘ie 4 LT 

* Gix months im Oamada ...'......-.-...--~---..-. .-+- 1.00 * 

* One year in Canada ooo neennnnnennnnnen 200 * Go To FLEMING’S For 1 

* One year in United States _...--.........-.-.------ 2.50 * . . | 
* ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION * Shopping Festival 


THE REDCLIFF REVIEW, THURSDAY, OCT, 5th 1939 


i eed arcana ha tcrentcennch th ae ESS ATT A ESN | 
‘There is no Happiness Apart From Freedom, Freedom is the ; 
itage of those Courage to Defend it.’’- See The Fine Selection of $] 
a re spinor 960 om " » Fall Fashioned Silk Hose 59 ¢| 
st Fur Trimmed COATS | 
EMERGENCIES Chamois Lined $9.08. Fitk Srewes* $3.19 5) 
is Li | 
FOR SERVICE IN NATIONAL - AT Oriental Kimonas $1.19 >| 
>| 
: det 4] 
VOLUNTARY REGISTRATION OF CANADIAN WOMEN Oriental Pyjamas + - $1.49 ii 
1.00 Lastex Girdles -  . § 
“+ 2. (V. RB. 0. Wi nu wane Ho woe n es $10.95 g astex Gird] 79 
ween seeeee oases QUESTIONNAIRE =e Seeeee ee $1.19 House Frocks - - 98 
ALL OTHERS AT SPECIAL $1.50 Silk Pyjomas $1.28 3 

To every nation ‘bere comes from time to time, periods of na DISCOUNTS 

tional distress, caused by various untoward circumstances Soa bates ea 
such as earthquakes, floods, tornadoes, crop failures, forest fires, 


grave economie depressions, epidemics, wars, ete. 


they should band themselves to gether in a voluntary scheme of 


istration #0 that, already prepared, they would be able to render 
in 
an endeavour to find how many Canadian women would be willing 


intelligent and etficient service, with this in mind, and 


That the Can 
adian women may be in a position to serve thelr nation at short 
notice in any of “he above calamities, it has been thought well that 


dietitian | 


physician ; 


ample; Air mechanic ; air pilot; weckkeeper: chenie 


filing clerk; first aid worker; motof mechanic ; 


nurs 


BARGAINS 


When in Medicine Hat 
Call at the 


SNACK SPOT 


Swedish Ice Cream, 
Solt Drinks, Hambergers, 
Lunches and Coffee 


Lang Bros., Ltd. 
INSURANCE 

Fire, Accident, 

Life, Sickness 


There are so many delicious 
varieties of Canadian FISH 
available all the year round, no 
matter where you live, that you 
ean add pleasing new dishes to 


and able to take British and refugee children psothenys homes, you Opp. Assiniboia Hotel 651 2nd St. Medicine Hat Remove bones and fake one wisi | the family menus. 
are asked kindly to consider the following questionnaire and ty 8rd Street Medicine Hat Telephone 3554 qpoien horsecudich, 1 tomatoes - | “And remambee, fish te wbustehdas, and 
assist by answering the same. ence nislse, seasonings, pend gecer. | is easily digested. Ask your desler 
t. (Burmame) -.- (Given Neme) ~~. Husband's Name ---- cemarmcrsSetees | Sl Sal tee gem aad Grape So enrve 
2. Permanent Address: weesenee (Home) 2+: (Business) ------0 . tinder low brolice heat unit brows, | Fish to your family often. 
3. Telephone Number: -....... )Home) +--+. pre sone senate ciabotigt Renewal of your Subscripti on Now Pour over the sandwich « sauce bernernen ¥ wich 
4. Are You a British Subject? .....-.... Place of Birth? -. POTATO AND FISH CASSEROLE 
5. Married, Single or Widow? .......---- Age group - “tants : ; costed taht and plese Ia amp: 

s pate | (18—25) ; eB (4050) ; (60-65) will be grea tly appreciated fole, “Sivwiy, el age gp Se ee 
6. Occupation. ... _...- w+ Bei gion 9 -reen-eneeronn Cihcr Gio tolatare Co sotonad day 
7. Are You OEE Senaitelin If Unemployed, pats Long? -. Sf tap ommeepsie with weibaked 
9. If Children, How many under 16 years? -.. janie | Rebbe tied lise satin cS oven want siedaant Baan a 


10, Could you take children or adults into your head temporaly 
. Free or for payment? 


Now or !n an emergency? How Many? .. 
11, What Sex, Race or Religion would you Prefert 


12, Are yeu willing to have your home inspected and visited for 


this purpose? ....... 
13. (a) Is your eyesight normal ?.... 
(2) without glasses? 
(b) is your hearing normal? 

(ce) Can you be active on your feet for 6 hours daily? --- 

*4. eve you been occupied (a) In business? -....... 
tions? ........ -- ‘t4ve particulary). 


If 80, by Whom ? ----------csveceeeees a 
- (1) With cians ae 


ing or preparing food in large QTE T nesensservvsnnnesorssensesonnne op 
~«l7, What Qualifications or Technical Training Have you? F 


TOWN OF REDCLIFF 


Notice is given that, under the provisions of The Tax 
Recovery Act, 1938, Town of Redcliff will offer for sale by 
public auction atthe Town Office, Third Street N. E., Redeliff, 
Alberta, on Wednesday, the 18th day of October, 1939, at 2 o’elock in 
the afternoon, the following parcels of land: 


wee BLOCK PLAN| LOT BLOCK PLAN 
2 1117V| 28, 24 61 1117V 
24 21 , 29 cy 1117V 
89, 40 26 ” 7 106 ” 
° 50 mid BD 188 ” 
Ko ae 
a 0 22 oF ie. on 27 to 81 ine. 
B ' 5112 AV in block 8 2876 AV. 
That portion of Easterly 972 
1 to 18, 23 to 28 ine. feet of the South West quarter 
jn Block 1 ae of Sec, 8, T 18, R. 6, W. 4th M 
3 to 461 - Alta., which lies to the East of 
© 40 inc. 2 the Hastert limit of 9th Avenue, 
. as the said atreet and Aveaue 
All of 8, 4, 5, 6, 7 the Land. Title, Otlioe or the 
All lots 1 to 28 inc. Land Titles Office for the 
aoibdins aed of tos 00 South Alberts Land ration 
lying to Bouth of District oo Rae 375 AV, 
‘orth 77 f containi acres more or 
- et there et | | lems, 0s deveribed in C. of T. 
47 B 135. 
land 2 9 6112 AV Hesth: Went quarter of Section 
1 and 2 10 i 5, T. 18, R. 6, W 4th M. con- 
taining 160 acres more or less 
All blocks 11, 12, 13 " as described in C. of T. 47 B 133. 
All lots 


1 and 2 in 14, 15, 16 


Each parcel will be offered for sale, subject to the approval 
of the Minister of Municipal Affairs, and subject to a reserve bid 
and to the reservations contained in the existing certificates of title. 
Terms, cash. 

Redemption may be effected by payment ofall] arrears of 
taxes and costs, at any time prior to the sale. 


Dated at Redcliff, Alberta, this 22nd day of August, 1989. 


F. V. BRITT, Secretary- Treasurer. 


ib) In cagtalan 
s&, What Expericnce Have You Had ‘in managing or organizing 


holiday or other camps, or recreation groups or public institutions 
16. What Experience or Training Have you Had in catering, buy- 


KEETLEY JOHNSON 
For Accident, Fire and 


REDUCED 


Department of Fisheries, Ottawa; 


Please send me your 52-pai 


RAILWAY Bicknesg Insurance Booklet, 100 Tempting Fish 
A N. Fn en ee ee 
Trust & Fidelity , Bonds (PLEASE PRINT LETYERS PLAINLY) ' 


o> 8 «© ef 
ik. a me 


7th Street, Redcliff 


Address 


FARES 


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Thanksgiving Day 
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FOR ROUND TRIP 


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"gold for Oct, 5 
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~ 


2S GES LO ORAL AEE A a 


the following list of some of the more 
outstanding achievements, compfiled 
by The Winchester Press: 


Canada built amd sent the first 


| 


| 


§ 


iF 


7 


: 


| 
| 


z 
: 


f: 


the world. 


g8zE 
23 


ity 
ue 
I 


: 
| 


4 
5 


i 
| 


cities. They are being used by the 
big dairy companies in decreasing 
numbers. 


that so pleasingly 
match the white rubber-tired wagons, 


still pursue their noiseless rounds in 
the early morning hours, but their 
days are numbered, too, and one sees 
more and more of the white motors 


after a few more years on the 


as well as risk in this trade, and the 
movements of all cargo veasels will 
be profoundly affected. 

Thus in our integrated modern 
world does the “Danzig issue” make 
itself felt in the farthest and most 


Gl 


HALE 


i 
f 


‘}eve of the German attack upon Po- 


{| mocracy is not a slogan; not a flag. 


|not prepared to put awayeselfishness shout, “God bless you, sir.” 


t 


A MAP OF THE EUROPEAN TROUBLE AREA 


An interesting map of Europe, showing the principal powers concerned th typ latest crisis and. some of 
fortifications. 


: 


Great As Deep Ploughing | Division Of Responsibility 
Experiments conducted by the! The defence of Canada regulations, 
Field Husbandry Division, Dominion! one of the measures which Prime 
Experimental Farms, have shown! Minister Mackenzie King said the 


ceasing supporter of the League of! that shallow ploughing produces as! government has made effective, de- 
Nations. When the League was go-| high yields as deep ploughing at a’ fine the division of responsibility be- 
ing well and afterwards when its| Considerable saving in power re-' tween the different departments of 


quirements. Furthermore, tillage, government, with the precise steps 
beyond that required for weed con-|to be taken by each responsible 
trol and reasonably good seed bed! official determined. : 
preparation has no beneficial effect! Proclamations, orders - in - coun 
on yields, warrants, telegrams and other nec- 
In many districts of the Prairie essary documents were prepared in 
Provinces, ploughing for summer. | Stvance, and among the méasures 


land, he sent the following message 


to the League of Nations Society in 
Canada: 


“Peace, to be really permanent,| fallow has been largely dispensed) thus provided for in the regulations 
must be based on justice. German) with in favour of the “ploughiess fal-) are: 
policy, which aims at world domina-|low” by surface cultivation. In, Enforcement of examination ser- 


Eastern Canada, ploughing sod land) vice at the various ports, in respect 
in the summer with after-harvest| to all incoming vessels. | 
cultivation where weeds are trouble-| Detention of enemy shipping. 
Some, and ploughing in late fall on’ Examination of outward bound 
less weedy land, have both proved) shipping to prevent export of contra- 
superior to spring ploughing, especi-| band of war. 5 

ally on heavy soil, One advantage of Control of ail wireless stations. 
summer or fall ploughing is that it) Enforcement of censorship on wire- 
facilitates the early seeding of cereal\ less and cable messages, 

crops which experiments have clearly; The regulations also deal with the) 
shown to be very desirable. arrest and detention of enemy na- 


- tionals. 
Is Well Informed 


Britain's Air Chief Marshal Knows 
All Air-Pighting Tactics 


Not The Only One 


| Many People Go Places And Do Not 
Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh C. T. See Anything 

Dowding was in supreme command) Calvin Richards, with only eight 
) - of the country’s defences in the re- dollars in bis jeans, thumbed his 
cent air manoeuvres. way two thousand miles to see the 
He knows what fighting in the San Francisco Exposition, 

air means; has watched every new Then when he got to the Exhibi- 
phase of air fighting tactics, which tion, he decided he wouldn't go in be- 
has changed considerably since then. cause he thought it would pinch his 
The best pageant Hendon ever put pennies too hard. So he hitch-hiked 
up was under his orders. Directly | the two thousand miles home again. 
afterwards the King gave him the Just four thousand 
GCvVo. nothing! But there are 
: “During my long) of us like Calvin right 
and highly prized association with) own home country, says the Huron 
the R.A.F. no display has testified Expositor, Seaforth. 


and medicine, has lectured at several! more clearly to the efficiency and) limited miles at unlimited speed and 
universities, including the m of the Service.” we don't see anything on the way, 
His chief hobby is skiing, at which| and we don't see antyhing when we 
he is an expert. get there, nor on the way back. 
If his pet-name is “Stuffy”, be- We just go, and keep going, and 
ally diseased persons can be identi-) cause of his reserved manners, when! always farther afield. The unfor- 


once known he is a loyal and un-' tunate part about it is, however, none 
selfish friend...News of the World. | of us seem to be able to make these 
trips as cheaply as Calvin did. 

Cheered By ‘Troops And still more unfortunately, none 
George; carrying a gas mask | f US seem to try. 
It is a living reality; a brotherhood! and dressed in the service uniform) eee 
of society of human beings, @ band-| of @ field marshal, received a tre-| 


The Sydney Post-Record says; De- 


sketch occupies a prominent place in 


and greed and exploitation, be not, — South Africa House, Lopdon, beside 
prepared to make some sacrifice for) - Brazil, though unrivalled for num-| the portraits of Generals Botha and 
the common good, then we are not per and size of its rivers, has few, Hertzog, 


democrats at all. lakes. 


In 10 years airmail letters sent 
Japan has a record wheat crop from England have increased from 
this year. half @ million to 100 million & year, 


Eagies have been known to live 


GERMAN SHIPS IN NEUTRAL PQRT AWAIT ORDERS 


~ wer i pe ” Se ae » : : 

These eight German ships, anchored in the harbour of Curacao, Dutch West Indies, a neutral port, are await- 

ing orders from home. Names of the vessels are being taken off and smokestacks and sides painted # dull gray.) 
The crew of the ships are roaming the streets of Curacao. 


Sawdust / As Fuel 


Vancouver Is Now Using Waste Ry- 
Product Of Lamber Mills 

“No, we don't want any sawdust 
to-day,” defended the Vancouver 
householder to the salesman at the 
door. 

“But,” persisted the solicitor, “now 
is the time to buy your dust. We 
sell good Fir sawdust for three-fifty 
per unit. It will cost you a lot more 
when winter comes.” 

Sawdust for the furnace; sawdust 
for the kitchen range; sawdust for 
the water heater. That is the fiiel 
language of Vancouver to-day, writes 


broken logs, lumber, bark 
like into sawdust, and this is 
&@ profit. 

As to cost, sawdust seems 
the cheapest of all fuels 
Coast. A unit is 200 cubic 


erly burned. No smoke or soot and 
the fuel is easily handled. 

British Columbia fir makes the best 
sawdust. This commands the best 
price. Prices run from $4 a unit 
down to $2.50, depending on the sea- 
son and the quality. Experts who 
know their dust can tell in an instant 
how it will grade in the furnace. 

“I've tried them all,” observed a 
business man. “Coal, ofl, gas and 
wood, Sawdust is the best. Give me 
sawdust,” 


No single project in Mani 
recent years has received as 
attention as the International 
Garden at Turtle Mountain. 


cisco fair building to the 


ing OU Line From Turner Valley 

Alberta authorities are giving full 
co-operation to federal representa- 
tives in gathering data which is to be 
submitted to British interests for 
study regarding @ proposed pipe line 
running from the Turner Valley field 
either eastward to Fort William or 
westward to Vancouver. 


the pipe line project, it was learned. 


Much Progress Made 

Although tractors did not come 
into general use until the war years, 
an English paper notes that there 
was an agricultural motor on ex- 
hibition in 1904. Much progress has 
been made since that date in effici- 
ency and adaptability, making them 
serious rivals of the horse. 


The Vedalia lady beetle is respon- 
sible for much of the success of 
California's citrus industry. It feeds 
en all of the pest insects. 


Alaska is approximately 
miles from New York City. 


THE REVIEW, 


REDCLIVE, ALBERTA 


> Wm. re © 

ers Silverplate. 

rite now for pre- 

yee to 
oO 

a. rigtse 


m 
hos. 
imite 

ding. Toronto 


LIPTON 


Full -Havoured TER 


WORLD HAPPENINGS 
BRIEFLY TOLD 


Twenty women in Vermillion, 120 
miles east of Edmonton, volunteered 
their services to the Canadian Red 
Cross Society in its war work. 

Canada had a favorable balance of 
trade of $179,331,500 in the first sev- 
en months of 1939, compared with 
$101,884,682 in the ‘corresponding 
period last year, the Dominion bureau 
of statistics reported. 

The government is requisitioning a 
number of government vessels and 
privately-owned vessels for war pur- 
poses and is outfitting them for ser- 
vice, Hon. Ian Mackenzize, defence 
minister, announced at Ottawa. 

Bight hundred Poles contributed 
$1,200 at a mass meetirig in Hamil- 
ton, Ont., for Red Cross relief of their 
countrymen resisting the German in- 
vasion. The Polish colony here pre- 
viously had raised $3,000 for the 
Red Cross. 

A survey of Canadian homes to 
learn who would be willing to take 
in children and old people from Great 
Britain will be made under the Cana- 
dian Women's Committee. _ Margaret 
P. Hyndman, Toronto director of the 
organization, announced. 

A national appeal for funds will be 
launched Noy. 13, it was announced 
by the national council of the Red 
Cross Society of Canada after an 
emergency meeting at Government 
house. The council decided against 
setting an objective at present. 

Assistance of Canada’s 100,000 boy 
scouts in any capacity in which they 
can usefully serve has been offered to 
Prime Minister King by Sir Edward 
Beatty, president of the Canadian 
general council of the Boy Scouts’ 
Association, 

Mayor Ralph Day announced in 
Toronto that the Royal Winter fair 
annual automobile show, 
scheduled for early fall, had 


Many Different Ideas : 
“Edwin Drood”, the mystery story 
Charles Dickens left unfinished when 
he died in 1870, has had more than 
450 conclusions written for it, which 
have been gathered together by the 
Dickens Fellowship. 


There are about nine times as 
many moth families as there are 
butterfly families. 


MICKIE SAYS— _ 


NEP WE KNOW THIS HERE 
. NEWSPAPER AINT THE 
WORLD'S GREATEST ~ 
GUT NEVTHER \s Our 
“TOWN © NE 00 TH BEST 
WE KIN, IN OUR FIELD 


‘| grams for these and other gifts from 


Carries On Tradition 


| Duke Of Kent Takes Up Masonic 
Duties Of His Great Uncle 


Masonically, July 19 seems a pro- 
pitious date for the Duke of Kent.) 
He was invested Senior Grand War-| 
den and installed Provincial Grand 
Master of Wiltshire on that date in 
1933 and 1934. But this July 19 
stood out prominently, for on it he} 
was installed Grand Master of the 
United Grand Lodge of England in 
succession to his great uncle the| 
Duke of Connaught, for 38 years. 
| Grand Master. Some ten thousand) 
Masons from all parts of the world 
witnessed the ceremony in Olympia. 
They had the unexpected pleasure of 
seeing the King, as a Past Grand | 
Master of Grand Lodge and patron! 
of English Freemasonry, install his 
brother. They could not resist cheer- 
ing him-—-an unusual thing at these 
ceremonies. At these private func-| 
tions His Majesty has no trace of} 
nervousness or hesitation. The Duke 
of Kent found himself momentarily | 
overawed by the ordeal, but he soon 
regained confidence and carried) 
through the ritual in an efficient) 
manner. He is carrying on a tradi- 
tion of centuries. The King remind- 
ed his brother: “Except for one 
period of 30 years a member of our 
house has occupied the throne of 
Grand Masonry for over a century 
and a half. For the past 65 years 
the throne was filled first by our 
grandfather, King Edward VII., and 
then by our great uncle, the Duke of 
Connaught.”—London Daily Sketch. 


Fight Against Tuberculosis 


Disease Caused More Than 6,000 
Deaths In Canada Last Year 

Specialists from all parts of Can- 
ada gathered at the annual meeting 
of the Canadian Tuberculosis Asso- 
ciation at Winnipeg to discuss plans 
for more unified action between Do- 
minion and provincial authorities in 
the fight against tuberculosis. The) 
disease caused more than 6,000 
deaths in Canada last year. 

A successful campaign to educate 
the public in Quebec province on 
tuberculosis treatment, which had 
resulted in a 100 per cent. increase 
in the number of persons seeking ad- 
vice at dispensaries and clinics, was 
described in a paper prepared by Dr. 
Lasalle Laberge, of Quebec City and 
delivered by Dr. Arthur Powers of 
Hull, Que. 

The paper said that need for the 
campaign was shown by the fact that 
although Quebec’s population was 
only 28 ‘per cent. of the total popula- 
tion of Canada, the province ac- 
counted for 43 per cent. of the total 
death rate from tuberculosis. 


} 


| HOME SERVICE | 


DELIGHTFUL GIFTS YOU CAN 
QUICKLY MAKE 


rae 
¥ 


Bathroom Boxes, Gay, Useful 

eet and gay as a garden 

~this utility bathroom box. Grand 

for face tissue, toiletries—-a charm- 
' 


gift! 

= make it, cover with oilcloth an 
ordinary cardboard box having an 
attached top. Use a small patterned 
oiicloth in cheery hues of red, green, 
blue or yellow. 

You can snip out the cover in a 
few minutés, cutting pieces of oil- 
cloth for front, sides, back, bottom 
and cover of box. Cut flap, if there 
is one, in one piece with cover. And 
cut another piece for facing inside 
of cover. 

Now bind edges of each piece with 
bias cotton binding in white or 
harmonizing color as in 1. 
Lay pieces in place on cardboard box 
and whip together along bound 
as Figure 2 shows. Fasten flap with 
snap. 

And now that gourds are ripe, you 
can make all sorts of pretty new 

ets from them -—- lamp-shades, 
candy bowls, soapfiake holders. 

Get complete directions and dia- 


our 32-page booklet. Smart cello- 
phane cases for linens and china, un- 
usual knitting bags, bookrack table, 


puppets, doll et, many more 
delightful novelties. 
15¢ in coins for of 


Service Dept., Winni New 
Union, 175 McDe ve. E., - 


nipeg. 


The following booklets are also| band Canada Geese. 


available at 15¢ each: 


at 
118-—“Secrets of Successful Candy | ¢ 


408—Making Plants and Flowers 
Grow Indoors.” 


166——“Philosophy: A 


Guide to Hap- 
pier Living.” : . 


Xow can get 
genatne, briiient 
Coleman light in 
this new non pres 
sure temp. it burns 
con! off 99% air, 
0% Twel. Has wide 
variety of shades 
Coleman retin 
mentie, geable 
with similar - type 
lamps, retails for 
only able 


saving. 
SEE YOUR DEALER oF 
write to os for details! 


COLEMAN LAMP & &TOVE 
17h. WEP 495 


forme J) TORONTO, ONT. 
A YOUTHFUL NEEDLE 
“QUICKIE” 


By Anne Adams 


4209 


revenge sd _—— Instructor, 
ere’s its making. The 
skirt Rog — A 


and flares so be- 
Fy ye circular in style, with only 
au front 
no seams to fuss with at side or 
back! The are set on a novel 
angie. You'll like either of the two 
sleeves—the puffed style with the 
well-shaped, stitched bands, or th 
slashed, short flared sleeves. For ex- 
sleeve 


sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 16) 
takes 3% yards 39 inch fabric. 

Send twenty cents (26c) in coins 
(stamps cannot be accepted) for this 
Anne Adams pattern. rite plainly 
Sima, Name, Address and oy Num-— 


and send order to Anne 
Adams Pattern Dept., Winnipeg 
McDermot , 


N Union, 175 
Ave. Winnipeg. 


The Value Of Birds 

Experts calculate that six to ten 
years without birds would bring to 
@ close the earth's entire system of 
animate nature. Insects would in- 
crease to such proportions that 
everything would be smothered or 
devoured. 

Young foxes, wolves, and bears are 
called pups; young beaver, mink, and 
muskrat are called kits. 


MEMORIAL CAIRN IN THE WINDERMERE 


| 
L 


Sixty-five years after his death, David Thompson, said to be the great- 
est land geographer who ever lived, but who died in obscure poverty in 
| Montreal, was honored with a memorial cairn at Wilmer, B.C., in the Winder- 
The simple cairn of rock to which residents of the 
Windermere valley contributed, was unveiled by Dr. Mary Crawford of Win- 
nipeg after an address by Judge F. W. Howay of New Westminster, B.C., 
| noted historian and director of the National Sites and Monuments Board. 

Capt. E. N. Russel, superintendent of Yoho and Kootenay National 
was in charge of the arrangements, 
| cluded the reading of Bliss Carman’s poem, “David Thompson”, and the | 


mere, September 4. 


Parks, Field, B.C., 


| Singing of the ballad “David Thompson", composed by John Murray Gibbon | 


of Montreal. 


David Thompson, with extraordinary accuracy, placed on the map the 
main routes of natural travel in 1,200,000 square miles in Canada and 500,- 
| 000 square miles in the United States; surveyed the headwaters of the 
Mississippi, and discovered a new route to Lake Athabasca. 

In the picture at the extreme left is Judge Howay with other officials 
and Dr. Mary Crawford in the left foreground. 


Air Safety 
New Device To Prevent Fires On 
Air Craft | 
Canadians will be interested to 


; 
learn that a device designed to pre- 


vent or put out fire in the engine of) 
an aircraft has been adopted by the) 
Air Ministry and is being made} 
standard equipment on Royal Air) 
Force machines. It is known as the 
Gravinor equipment, and was invent-| 
ed by Capt. H. M. Salmond, a retired) 
officer of the Royal Indian Marine. 

Briefly a copper bottle of the fire- 
extinguishing medium, methyl-brom-|} 
ide, is mounted near the engine and 
is connected by pipes to those parts, 
such as the carburetor, where fire) 
sometimes occurs. There are four 
switches, any one of “which will re- 
lease the liquid, which immediately 
vaporizes. One switch can be oper- 
ated by the Plot. A second switch; 
consisting of a pendulum held in) 
position by a spring, will release the 
methyl-bromide in the event of a 
head-on crash. 


The fourth switch is a flame de- 
tector, and if fire breaks out, the 
flamé UF Heat will burn up a piece of, 


ink of it--| celluloid in the switch and bring the: City Editor Did Not Know Where 


extinguisher into action. 

The new device should be a safe- 
guard against the more usual causes 
of fire in airplanes, and will un- 
doubtedly be responsible for the sav~- 
ing of many lives—St. Catharine 
Standard. 


Passed All Tests 

An outstanding achievement of 
British engineering enterprise is the 
building of a Diesel locomotive to 
run on the highest railway line ir 
the world, near La Paz, the capital 
of Bolivia. The engine has now 
passed all tests, including the six- 
mile climb with a gradient of one in 
14 along a series of sharp “S" curves) 
from La Paz to the plateau 2,000 
feet above the city and 16,000 feet 
above sea level, 

Two persons between 16 and 21 go 
to prison every day because they are 
unable to pay fines, according to esti- 
mates, 


The wisest words are those 
don't say when angry. 


you 


BOTH MISSIONARIES WITH WORLD WIDE INFLUENCE 


one side of the tag, 
a 


spread the gospel of Jesus Christ, Jack Miner puts a verse of scrip- 
every person who shoots a tagged bird gets 
resulted in the hunters of North America 
ack Miner's missionary geese”. 


aitssnesiatalineninnatinnansinasennis 


aaa 


PE ee) fen ETE On 
: 


See wees 


! 


The dedication in- 
} 


An Interesting Discovery 


Upper Atmosphere Has Tides Similar 
To Those Of Sea 

In 1878 Balfour Stewart physicist, 
pointed out that certain regular 
changes in the earth’s magnetic 
qualities might be explained if there 
were tides in the upper atmosphere 
similar to the tides in the sea. Pro- 
fessor E. V. Appleton and K. Weeks 
of Cambridge have reported that 
they have succeeded in establishing 
the existence of these tides, using 
wireless apparatus and methods, At| 
a level of 70 miles above the ground! 
they found that the moon lifts the 
atmosphere 5,280 feet twice daily, 
and the range of it might be com- 
pared with the maximum sea tide at 
London Bridge of 21 feet and with 
the air tide of about 10 inches, which 
is estimated for surface conditions| 
at Greenwich, What causes this 
enormous tide at high levels is not) 
clear at present, and it is possible 
that a world survey using the 
methods developed at Cambridge, | 
which involve the timing of radio sig- | 
nals, to 1-100,000th of, the second, | 
will be required before the matter 
can be finally elucidated. — St. 
Thomas Times-Journal, 


Reporter’s Masterpiece 


Obituary Was Obtained 

Nunnally Johnson, says Leonard 
Lyons, in the New York Post, is re- 
vealing this story of Herbert Asbury, 
when he was a reporter for the New 
York Herald ahd was assigned to 
write the obituary for Eleanora Duse. 
He wrote six columns replete with 
flowery descriptives of her talents 
and of her immortality, but the city| 
editor was not content. “You're writ- 
ing about Duse’s death,” Asbury was | 
warned, “the greatest actress who} 
ever lived. Start again.” Asbury) 
obliged, and turned in a master- 
piece which was front-paged. The. 
city editor never knew that Asbury) 
had searched in the newspaper's) 
margue for an obituary from which | 
he borrowed, word for word, the 
descriptives of fame, achievement) 
and universal grief. The obituary 
was that of Joe Daniel, the Gorilla, 


Mixed His Characters 


Good Stery About A Butcher And. 
His Fussy Customer 

Bruce Barton in the course of liter- | 
ary argument at a reception: 

“My friend's literary references are | 
mixed. He reminds me of a story. 

“A lady went into a butcher's and 
asked for a pound of filet of beef. 

“The butcher cut it off. ‘There! 
you are, ma'am. Just 14 ounces.’ 

“But the lady said, ‘No, I want a 
pound exactly. It's for an important| 
dish at an important luncheon.’ 

“The butcher cut off a bigger) 
chunk. ‘Eighteen ounces. That all) 
right, ma'am?’ 

“‘No,’ said the lady—and she was 
arich and valued customer—no, I 
want you to cut me off a pound, no 
more and no less.’ 

“Ob, groaned the butcher, as he 
took up his knife again, ‘you and 
your pound of flesh? Why, you're a 
regular Shylock Holmes’.’-—Philadel- 
phia Inquirer. 


Farmers can,grade their own beef 
cattle by aid of a new system of 
body measurements and feed records 
worked out by the Department of 
Agriculture. 


Paris publishes a@ special news- 
paper for beggars. 2325 


OS aia Die ae Agari as aa Ee 


ih joo BEE HIVE 


CANADA) 
presents 


TOPICS 


by DR. J. W. S. MCCULLOUGH 


HEALTH BEHAVIOUR IN SCHOOL 


In Ontario’s new program for 
elementary schools, health has been 
given a foremost place, Hon. Dr. L. 
J. Simpson, Minister of Education for 
Ontario in the last issue of “Health” 
pointed out that in the new program 
the goal of health education will be 
health behaviour — “Not what the 
child knows about health but what he 
does about it.” 

In the past, health has been merely 
a subject for pupils to study so as to 
be able to answer questions. Often 
a pupil would pass a test with fiying 
colors but there would be no im- 
provement in his or her health. The 
new plan is to inspire pupils to do 
something about their own health. 

There will be regular checking of 
health habits to see that knowledge 
and practice go hand in hand, along 
with a carefully planned course of 
exercises in physical training. The 
new program also implies daily, as 
well as annual or semi-annual exami- 
nation of pupils individually. By this 
means, diseases in their early stages 
will be detected, as well as defici- 
encies in height, weight, hearing and 
sight. 

In making provision for greater 
attention to health, Ontario's educa- 
tional authorities have revised values 
placed on different studies. For ex- 
ample, arithmetic has long been given 
first place; now it will be in a pos- 
sible fifth place of importance, “It 
has been all too common” says the 
Minister of Education “to find the 
fresh morning hours and at least 30 
per cent. of the day’s working hours, 
as well as the bulk of home work, 
devoted to this study.” 


Editorial Note: Readers desiring 
the complete set of Dr. MeOul- 
lough’s cancer articles once 


at 
may secure same. by yin 
The Health League of Can 
Bond 8t., Toronto, Ont, 


A Good Salesman 
Prospective Buyer: “But I don't 
exactly like the looks of your ‘39 


| model in front.” 


Salesman: “But look at the lines 


| from the back. Doesn't it look good 


from that view?” 
Prospective Buyer: “Yes, but—”" 
Salesman: “Well, that’s ali any- 


| body ever sees of this car.” 


MEN E\ lili, 


GIRLS WITH 
te 


42 


EF 


oS MCSE Si a we 


UT if you are eros, 
men cant Nese ae 


" 


i 
x 
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tla A i LLL 


——_ 


i 


() ayanteed 2YEARS im 


SHELF LIFE Bae 


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@Penn Publishing Co. 
_ W.N.U. Service 
CHAPTER V. ai poof! She get mad lak de odder 
woman.” 


Sick at heart with Berthe'’s cold- 


“What do you make of Mrs. Han- 
ness, Alan sought his old friend) pury?” 
Pierte to learn what had been the; “T t’ink she ees huntin’ lak’ a fox, | 


comment at the Revillon Freres on yer’ hard for somet'ing. W'at dat 
his gudden departure for the north! ees 1 don’t know, but she ees try| 


coast, hard to find eet all de tam.” 

“You mak’ queck start, eh, dat| “she stops with the Northern 
night you leeve for de nor’?” laugh-| Trading people?” 
ed the big Frenchman when he and 
Julié, had welcomed the wanderer. 
“Doge poleece; dey. were ver’ cross, 
w'en) you beat dem to Whale Riv- 
flere. 

“What did they say when they got 
back?” 

“Waly “Tl hear’ dem ‘talk wid de 
boss. Dey say you race dem to 
Whale 50 you can. tell Neil Camp- 
bell about de monee.” 

“What did Gabriel say?” 

“He say, no, went for dog.” 

Good old briéi, thought Alan, 
he's still my friend. ‘Then he asked: 
“What has Rivard been saying? I 
know that he’s done all he could to 
turn the Madame and Berthe against 
me. Berthe wouldn't talk to me to- 
night,” 

Pierre scowled and shook his head. 
“Ah, dat ees bad-—-ver’ bad. Madame 
Dessane she lak’ Arsene, yes, she 
lak’ dat young feller. But Ma'm’- 
selle Berthe she weel be all right. Eet 


| Alan had met McCord. For a space | 


| bad poling water on this river.’ 


| things 


7 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


It was evident 
tended to ignore 
face to Whale 
as was most of 


that McQueen in- 
the matter of the 
River, 
Fort 


was satisfied, | 
George, that} 
the eyes of the youth met the other's! 
in a fixed stare | 
“I'm starting in 
said Alan 
water men?” 


about a 
Are you men 


week,” 
strong- 
} 


“Yes, they're good river men. Slade 
and I were brought up in a canoe.” 
“Good thing for you. There's some 


“Well, when you're ready to start,| 
let me know,” said McQueen 


“You'll be a month reaching the a sae that It we with — 
three forks ahd you'll need three The i eed Wheet Comsany, Le. 
months’ grub, for you might miss 
the caribou,” said Alan, hoping to 
learn whether the police intended to 
winter in {he interior or to return) im 
before the ..¢ \* s fA ’ 
“Three mths?” laughed tne! ae enna tf 4 e: 
other, rising. “We're travelling in| BBS PACKAS Oh 1.5 frag ° 
two canoes with flour for six A See 
| months.” | SSeS 


] 
As Alan watched McQueen walk 
toward the Hudson's Bay store he 


SHRE 


said aloud: “No, you won't get John) 

McCord. What a mess he'd make of 

you and Slade if you ever met | MAD E 
him!” 


Torn between pride and the desire! * 
to see Berthe, Alan sat in his cabin | 
that evening when the afterglow had 
faded from the sky and the rose flush 
of the river surface had retreated 
before the purple dusk. But a few 
days remained now before his start 
to meet John McCord and Heather.) 
When would he again see Fort) 
George and the girl who doubted) 
him? 


Noel was visiting at a Montagnais 


“You blockhead!” 
aged to say. 

She turned to find Rough stand- 
ing at her elbow, hair erect, his) 
throat swelling in a muffled growl. 

“That beast! Take that beast 
away from me!” she cried. 

“Here, Rough!" commanded Alan. 
“You're scaring the lady. Did you 
think she was going to bite me? I 
did. Good-night, Mrs. Hanbury!” he 
tipi and Alan smoked, alone with his| opened the door. ‘So that’s the way 
plans. There had been a list of) a special agent from Ottawa handles) 
to be bought for Heather) the men!" 
through one of the Montagnais girls,, Standing in the doorway he laugh-| 
a friend of Noel, to avoid suspicion. | ed bitterly into the night. He knew, 
And there was extra flour and sugar,| now, that he could not make his 
beans and tea, that McCord wanted) peace with Berthe Dessane before he 
to cache somewhere before they| left Fort George 
lunged into the unknown tundra—a) (To Be Continued) 


relief cache to which they could re-| — con 
treat if the caribou failed. Alan sat The Perfect Salesman 


deep in thought when th® yelping, 
puppies in the stockade aroused) 4, One Who Sees And Graspe Every 
Rough from his sleep, He went to Opportunity 

A sales manager friend saya he 


the door, listened, sniffed, then) 

aaprineny A . ,| knows the best way to pick sales- 
Hello, there! Alan COMERS) ge always an interesting and an 

Please take care of your dog! I) unsolved problem. But my friend 

says his method is infallible. 


want to see you!” 
It was the rich, throaty vetce that We pressed him for an explanation 
one night at the club and he told us 


had argued with Alan the right be- 
that the secret of a born salesman 


fore at the French Company's 
trade-house, Alan's dark brows met) ig whether he is or is not an oppor- 
tunist. 


in a scowl but he sent Rough to his 
An opportunist, your dictionary 


corner and opened the door. 

“Good evening! Will you come/-will tell you, is a perspn who senses 
in?” he said, wondering how soon|and grasps at opportunities; who 
Rivard would reach Berthe with the| seems to have a sixth sense which is 
news that Mrs. Hanbury had been at| denied most persons, 
his house, and yet hoping, as this) He told this story: One of his 
woman was @ government agent, to! salesmen, an opportunist, was caught 
learn more 6f John and Heather Mc-!| in a downpour at five minutes to five. 
Cord, He ducked into a vacant doorway. 

Alan lit another candle and placed! “Might as well cross the street and 
a chair for his caller. She smiled| go into that store,” he told himself, 
easily up at him while he 


she finally man-| 


It's nourishing and delicious, besides 
belng convenient and economical. 
eating Shredded Wheat today. 


4 : 


IN CANADA - 


Te 
=. 


ON MILLIONS OF BREAKFAST TABLES 


EVERY MORN/NG 


Canadian families 
enjoy eating delicious, 
crunchy, nutty-flavored Shredded 
Wheat, regularly, every day. It's 
good for them because it brings them 
all the energy of 100% whole wheat. 


Start 
You'll 


D WHEAT 


OF CANADIAN WHEAT 


Panama Canal Defence 


U.S. Government Has Plans To Mako 
It War Proof 


Turkish tailed Pelee 


Pressure From ifiermany Did Not 
Break Pact With Allies 
on fa Slight, grey-haired, slack-chinned 
After 25 years of operation the : 
He « General Ismet Inonuw, right hand 
Panama Canal now looms more than 
ever as “the keystone in the defence} moe bg bem to - late, great 
of the Western Hemisphere” and the | no pee eat in ag it 
United States Government has plans rae bape coe Ps os agg me 
under way to make it “war proof”. faoeu aro nour aa a 
The United States needs the canal! Voit to vo = pT rong on Le a 
t . 
ro only as © vital link inthe ne long after The Ataturk knew he had 
ional defence plan, enabling speedy been whipped, is al uite fearless. 
transfer of the navy from one ocean) 1+, the yor Rees rae ener ot 
to the other, but also for its great the Dardanelles 9 ed” biandish- 
commercial value. Since the canal menta, ab his pred roan werd: hurl 
opened in August, 1914, more than), threats, as Ambassador Franz, von 
100,000 commercial vessels have Papen sought to detach Turkey from 
passed through, it. ‘its Freneh-British guarantees, “hook - 
Congress this year appropriated) it to the Swastika. 
$27,000,000 to increase the military To Turkey, old-time friend “of ‘the 
garrison and defence equipment. To! suet Union with which it shires 
nth pr ye ey oe Move the Black Sea, news of the German- 
Can . “| Russian Pact akn ‘serious 
ment has recommenedd installation| *™=stee ab rte ? Giant 


of a “great number of seacoast gun 

friend Japan, It came just)as the 
batteries, submarine mine projects, | ' ‘French-Turkish 
anti-aircraft batteries and search-| eve! ONS oe zi 


trade pact. It also brought on what 

| 

EA crete tsa; wad tater dogcrbeg ag “extrnoral 

The present force guarding the canal See noed anak be tons in ae a +. 

comprises only 70. officers and ace perform ‘his isiiavé, bully act) t 

aren | President}.Ineny made clear to ’ 
In addition the War Department) and Brital t he stood with 


is studying plans for construction of) ee. Rast id 
a third set of locks in the canal, The) in Gee Ereet Jp uD.. - A with 


/ her No, 1 editor, would stand 
purpose of the new locks is two-fold; PD Reich 
they are needed to take care of iol cng Sipes “oven (LAR anmad 


| times stronger.” 
increasing traffic in the canal, and, . . 


as a defence measure, would permit z 

swifter passage of the navy through | Problem Child 

the canal. The estimated cost of this! cnmpesinaan 

plan is $277,000,000 | Vision Of Nine-Year-Old Boy Made 
General Malin Craig, recently re-| Him See Objects .Upaide Down 

tired as chief of staff, stated the | Richard Kenealy’s optical _night- 

Panama Canal was the “keystone in| mare {s over. 

the defence of the Western Hemi- 


ees dat woman, Hanbury, dat mak’ 
all de troub’. She turn Fort George 
on hees head, so wen Arsene tell 
Berthe you talk to her to-night, 


Use a solution* of Gillett’s 
Pure Flake Lye to take the 
grease off pots and pans. Use it 


“I got the pups in the Nasta- 
pokas, from a Husky.” 


“Ab-hah! And she make troub’ 
dere quick wid Madame Martin. De 
woman are all cross wid her, She 
weel not tell dem w’y she come to 
Fort George.” : 

The moon was up when Alan took 
the river trail to the Hudson's Bay 
settlement. His thoughts brooded 
over the mood in which he had found 
Berthe. There remained but a short 
space, now, before he would have to 
start for the headwaters—probably 
with the police; only too brief an in-| 
terval to win back Berthe. And then 
there would be months of absence, 
possibly a year or more in the in-| 
terior with John McCord, while Ri- 
vard and Madame Dessane poisoned | 


| 


ber mind. 


against the door, 

“You're a foolish young man, Mr, 
Alan Cameron. Do you realize that 
you've ruined your reputation at Fort 
George?" Mrs. Hanbury leaned for- 
ward, elbows on knees, chin cupped 
in her graceful, well cared for hands, 
as she watched Alan through her 
half-shut, hazel eyes. “Not only that, 
but you're in serious troubte with the 
government.” 

“Just what did you come to Fort 
George for?" he countered, “Are you 
here with McQueen on this man hunt, 
or is there something else?” 

She laughed boisterously at his) 
question, and totally unfamiliar 
though he was with women of the 
world, he caught a ring of hardness, | 
of callousness, in her voice, “I'm a} 
special agent of the government at 
Ottawa,” she went on and her voice 
suddenly softened with suggestion 
“put I'd swap secrets with a man as) 
—as handsome as Alan Cameron.”| 


; 
i 
hs made a dash for it. 


“Might as well see if this bird will 
buy what I sell,” he continued to) 
himself, going into the store and 
asking to see the manager. 


He interested the prospect, who 
asked the price. 
“Forty-eight dollars,” said the) 


salesman. The prospect said: “Let's | 
see. We have 12 stores. We need 
one for each. Ship us 12.” 

“That's what I mean by being an)| 
opportunist,” said my friend. “That) 
boy took advantage of a shelter from | 
the rain to see if there was any busi- 
ness kicking around,” 

Seems to me it would be a good) 
trait to cultivate —- opportunism,— 
Canadian Business. 


Spaniards Forced To Work 


Classes Must Do Their Share) 
Under Franco Regime | 

Even the ordinary Spaniard is a) 
rather proud hombre. He does not! 


Upper 


sphere,” and that it must be made) 
impregnable. 


To Aid Britain 


| 
’ 


Spiritual Ruler Of Mohammedans 
Enjoins His Subjects To 
Support Cause 
The Information Ministry in Lon 
don announced that the Aga Khan, 


spiritual ruler of 10,000,000 Moham-| ¥#e* both eyes now, apparently 


medans in India, Africa and Contza}| 
Asia, had called upon his subjects to) 
give “unstinted service” to the cause) 
for which Great Britain is fighting. 

It was announced that the Age 
Khan had sent the following message 
to the president of the Ismailia 
executive council in Zanzibar: 

“Jt is the first religious and setu- 
lar duty of all my spiritual children 
in Africa to co-operate loyally and 
do all in their power, Heartfelt, 


loyal, unstinted service must now be | 


The ning-year-pld's world of up- 


side-dgwn V objects is Row 
right side ee aE, Tonger does he 


| complain ‘thaf.:he sees lotomotives, 


sutomebiles, running: playmates and 

other moylng Uhings wrong side up. 
Training him t "only one, e 

at a ‘time ty pa Ra ora es 


from one ote was-eredit- 
. Dr, Bar p with put- 
cbard's.. order. * He 


with 
normal results, : 
Last year the Chicago ‘boy was re- 
ferred to Dr. Krump aa “pro! lea 
child" who was having difficulty tn 
reading in ‘school. He read from 
right to Jett instead of the normal 
left to right. Examiatton "tisclpsed 
his yision wag practically norma} ex- 
cept for being sharper in the right 
eye than in the left. i. 
a 


" "Well Shot 


There always wene boots — and 


t 


But McCord had prom-| 
ised him money and morey he) 
needed. 


to keep clogged drains running 
freely. It cuts through heavy dirt 


She rose from her chair and stood| like to be told what to do. More es-| 
in front of him, her. knee touching| pecially, he does not like to be com- 
his, as she looked down at him pos-|manded to work, We imagine that) 


given to the cause of the Empire) peavy boots—in tht armies of “Bri- 
which is the protector of our faith | tain. Remains ww job-nalled boots 
and liberty. This should be read! were found on the “Skeleton” of a 


of any kind . . . just washes it 
away! 
“Never GisgoWve lye in hot water. The 


action of the lye itself 
the water, 


The following morning when Alan) 
and Noel returned from their fish 
nets and were playing with the huge 
puppies inside the dog stockade, they 
had a caller. / 

“G’morning, Cameron!” Alan look-| 
ed up to recognize the thick-set fig- 
ure of Sergeant McQueen behind the! 
slabs of the gate. “You got your 
dogs, I see. Beauties, too! Nothing} 
like them at Whale River.” 

“I got the pups in the Nastapokas, | 
from a Husky,” be answered, as the 
slate-gray Powder, pursued by Shot | 
and the brown-patched Rogue circled, 
him in a mad race, while Rough lay 
mear at hand, watching their child- 
ish antics through condescending, 
oblique eyes. 

“I want to talk with you, Cam-| 

“All right,” 

Leaving Noel with the dogs, Alan 
jomed McQueen and entered his 
house. The policeman took the chair 
Alan offered and leisurely filled and 
lit his pipe, then asked abruptly, 
“When do we start up river?” 


|denly placed both hands on 


sessively. “Now if you'll tell ' 
where you left McCord, I'll tell you) 
just why I happen to be here.” 

As he watched her, hoping that, in| 
her brazen self-confidence, she would 
carelessly say too much, she sud- 
his | 
shoulders, and gazed triumphantly 
down at him as if already she had 
won. But he smiled inwardly at her 
easy assumption of victory, So the 
rude hunter of fur was now supposed 
to tell all he knew when the per- 


| 


| fumed lady from Ottawa flashed her 


teeth, threw back her head and look- 
ed at him through her long lashes? 
Well, he also had some teeth to 
show. Calmly brushing aside her de- 
taining hands, he rose from his chair 
and, while her brain fought with her 
offended pride as wave after wave 
of blood stained her face, he calmly 
lit his pipe. 

“You--you--"” she choked. 

“You--what, Mrs. Special Agent?” 
he asked. coolly. 

Suddenly recovering her poise she 


LM —— T° 


me | still less will he fancy being told to after prayers daily and published. 
The Enipire affairs section of Une | Hang, 2.009 


do 15 days’ work for the state with-| 
out pay. That he must do such forced 
labor is what has been decreed by the 
Franco regime. 
able-bodied Spaniard to escape is to 
pay into a government agency 16 
days’ wages, There are classes in 
Spain which have not for generations 
lifted @ band in the way of work.) 
They are destined now for 4 taste of 
what reconstruction under @ dictator | 
means.—Victoria, B.C,, Times / 


YOUR ADDRESS 
IN MONTREAL 


SHOULD ALWAYS (* 


Information Ministry's communique 
detailed pledges of assistance from 


The only way for an| British Guiana and Mauritius, ab ts) ing in the plant world. 


land of 400,000 
Ocean. 

It said the Governor of Seuthern 
Rhodesia had mobilized all units in 
the territoria) active force and their, 
regimental reserves in Salisbury 
Bulawayo, Umtali and Quelo for 
active service “within or beyond the 
borders of the colony.” 


people in the Indian} 


The planet Jupiler revolves about 
the sun in 12 of our earth years, but 
on the planet is only nine 
hours and 55 minutes long, since the 


planet 


The MOUNT ROYAL *°*““ 


HOTEL 


VERNON G. CARDY 


A simple instrument has been de- 
vised to measure the refraction index 
of glass 

Oak weighs 60 pounds & cubic 
2325 


spins completely on its axis) 


” | Roman soldier buried near'@harigury, 


Common named Sree very natsidad- 
* Dogwogd is 
one thing In North’ America, but in 
England it is an entirely ‘ diffefent 
plant ; 

Nearly 1,500,000 acres in the, Ur- 
benville district of New South Wales 
will be planted to trees and its-wild 
life protected 


Fiery, Itching =» 
Toes and Feet 


Here te «6 stainless antiseptic off 
now dispensed by chemists at trifling cost, 
that will do more to help you get rid of your 
trouble than anything you've ever used 

Ite 
that 


action is #0 powerfully pehetra) 
the Uching i instantly stopped; 
ie @ short time you are rid of that 


Piedad liek, ic 
Pees 


a 


— 


Aion Alig lp iu a 


THE REDCLIFF REVIEW, 


THURSDAY, OCT. bi) 1030 


Messr¢., 


Gadeski, 


4 


There are over 300 children in |/ 


the local school at present 
* * . 


FASHION 


Interesting i 
Local Items 


» © e 


E.G. WALTERS, Proprietor 


We Specialize In All 
Work Pertaining to 
Furs Such as 


Basil Moore Jr. raturned home 


after a week’s absence at Van- 


couver and otther western points 


that of 
Day 


their 
They will 


Lockwood, and J. Farrell 
MacDonald, Martin Good 
Rider, Maurice Moscovich 
Moroni om, Victor Jory. 


Mr. and Mrs. 
district 


selection of fur coat linings 


Orders taken for made to mea- 
sure coats, at no evtra charge 


10.00 A. M, Sunday School 


Lapp of Breeze 
as their 
their nephew | ret for October 22nd. 


lawn have 


“ALL WORK GUARANTEED || ests at provent, 


The Desert Has Neve: 
Known Greater Heroes ..- 
The Screen Has Never 
Known Greater Love! 


ery Highlanders spent Tuesday Hat, on Thursday, Sept. 


We Are Disposing Of 
4 LADIES’ CARACUL 
PAW 


Miss Harris 
* 


Wilfrid 


er of Redcliff— a daughter. 


os @ 


Mr. Campeau was A 


visitor at Bow Island on Satur ONE ONLY 
Fur Coats on Government business in con ELEC TROL UX 
Which were traded in and nection with the crop testing. REFRIGERATOR 
’ 7 > 
will go at a very reasonable , LIKE NEW 


Set. Major Ted Maskell and 


ice. This is an excelent i : 
price. This is Frivate Eli Shaw are leaving to 


opportunity to buy a good 
fur coat at a very low price. 
A deposit will hold any of 
these coats. 

They can be seen at 314 
South Railway Street, two 
doors from Library. 


LEVINSON’S 
FURRIERS 


Christie Block, Sixth Ave. 
Above Wright Jewelry 


A GOOD DEAL FOR CASY 


See Our Line of 
COAL AND GAS RANGES 
ALSO RADIOS 


D. A. NORRIS & CO. 
Srd Street (Medicine Hat 


Brian Donlevy, Susan Ha: - 
ward, J. Carrol Na'sh, Don- 
ald O'Connor, James 


day for Calgary after a week’s 


eave here with their families, 
* . > 

Mr. and Mrs, A. E. Shaw 

is their guests last Sunday 

and Mrs. Mellon and Mr. 


Mrs. Sartison of Tilley. 
* 


Be Sure Te Come in Avd 
SEE FOR YOURSELF 
The Exceptionally Pine 


FESTIVAL VALUES 


We Are Offering For YOU 


Mr. and Mrs. Bud Taylor of 
Red Deer spent afew days in 
town last week, with Mrs. Tay- 
lor’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. 


Paterson. 


o + . 


Miss Esther Rexin left on Sun: 
day for Calgary, where she will 
take a course in Home Econom- 
ies at the Youth Training School 
being held there. 


*> 


ON . 2. ae 


Now is the Time to Plan 
Build, Remodel and 
Repair Homes 


Weare equipped to give you 
assistance in carrying out your 
own ideas of the newest 1939 
House Plans te meet needs 


The Gas City 


Oct. 5-6-7 
At 


The Mayfair 


Mr. P. MeDermid had as his 
guests for a few days last week, 
his son Robert and nephew Peter 
MeDermid of Ferdig, Montana. 
They motored here from the U. 8 
arriving Tuesday and returning 
Thursday. 


ASSINIBOIA 
COFFEE SHOP 


DIOK PICKERING, MarR. 
_ MEDICINE HAT’S 
NEWEST AND MOST 
MODERNLY 


SSRSSSSESSESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOSSSOSSE Seeseeesesesets 


SILVER’S 


Shopping Festival 


SALE 
Ladies’ & Men’s Ready to Wear 


HEATERS 


Diecount On All Gas Heaters EQUIPPED _saneane Galena 
Buy Now Before Advance ¢|| COFFEE SHOP Se 
in Prices Featuring Home REDUOED 


Cooked Foods 


Dresses reg. $4-95 for - - $2.95 


$2.90 and up 


Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Hats reg. $2.95 for - - $1.95 
Men's 2 Pant Suits 
r Light Lunehes, Hambergs, ’ 
RAE HARDWARE ™ s pag 90.10.60" 


Medicine Hat Phone 2918 


DEMAND 
Brookwood Bakery Products 


The New Hard Surfaced Road Between 
Redcliff and Medicine Hat 


BRINGS VOU NEAR THE BIG FURNITURE STORE 


See Our Lovely Stock of Draperies, Fall Bedding, Dainty 
China, Dinette Suites, Chesterfields, Dining Suites, 
“Bedroom suites, Studio Lounges. 


WEEKLY SPECIALS 
DINETTE SUITE in lovely walnut finish. Table with 
4 concealed leaf. Four splendid diners, 6 pieces $4975 


CHESTERFIELD SUITE in lovely silk tapestry. 
‘ New woed trim and two matching chairs. Only 


FRESH BREAD 
CAKES PASTRIES 


Delivered at your Door Daily 
By Our Salesman. 


ee ee 


$68.75 
$6.95 


BLANKETS grey, white and colored pure wool. pr 


gL AARORE. & SON 


phone 2787 Near Medicine Hat Garage 


PHONE 2422 Medicine Hat PROP. R. BASTIEN 


etors sl 
of the new Redeliff Barber Shop 
were Calgary visitors on Sunday. 


THURS rRi SaT —————————OOOOOOOOO Mouday, October 9th will be 
— d F Miss Sarah Davies and Mrs. ©.|qhanksgiving Day 
, Lo Out % FUR SHOP Johnson were visitors.in Calgary wfteaed ee 
B eonens 615 3rd Street last week end. Mr. and Mrs. Foster reached 


another milestone in their marri- 
éd lives last Monday Sept. 25th., 
Golden Wedding 
celebrate the 


REMODELLING o 9, © oceasion later when different 
RELINING .. Migs sehr left on Sut-|members of their family will be 
* REPAIRS aud day for Cardston where she has} able to be with them 
iia CLEANING jecepted a position on the hosnit | . £2 
Randolph Scott, Margaret We have just received & fine | [al staff. GORDON MEMORIAL 


7,30 P, M, Evening Serviee, 
.. Anniversary Sunday, has beon 


MON. — TUES. — WED. Agent for STRIN and whiaut ||°"" * — BIRTH 
or a . * 
Manufafacturers of Fine Furs se 
oT. — W— HH. sgt. Dave Morrison of the Cal- Thacker —Born-at Medicine 


28, 1939 
town the guest of Mrs, and | i, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Thack- 


ee eee, Ye ne YY nV Oroeee Yaeroee Ye 


SHOPPING FESTIVAL 


BIG NEWS FOR FRIDAY SATURDAY and MOND’Y 


Men’s Work Shirts, Well Tailored Work Shirts made of good 


wearing cotton flannels, Big and Roomy, 
Colors Sand and Blue, PECIAL $1.00 


MEN’S OVERCOATS, Very high quality pure wools in 
Tweeds and plain weaves. Raglan and Guard Models, 


new Greens, Blues and $18.50 & $19.50 


Browns, SPECIAL 
UNDERWEAR, Men’: cotton rib Combinations slightly 
fleeced, long sleeve ankle length, real Value at 1 


BOYS SCHOOL BOOTS, Good Wearing quality, fitted with 


solid leather soles that are both nailed.and $1 95 


sewn, Sizes 11 to 5¢ Price 


WORK BOOTS, Sturdy Work Boots, sails elk and grain 


leathers, will give hard wear, some $2.95 


with Panco Solos. PRICE 
BUY in Redcoliff and Help YOur Own Town 


THE HICKS TRADING CO. 


eet 


. 


Special Bargains 


FOR THE SHOPPING FESTIVAL 


’ Now is the time to buy Your 
Women s Coats Winter Coats. The selection is at 


its best, lovely all wool, materials beautiful fur trimmed, 
and prices that anyone can afford "$9. 95 to $45. 00 


to pay. All sizes Priced at 
Very Attractive are these Sucde 


Suede Pumps Pumps with continental heels, some 


are self trimmed, others have Patent or Kid trims. 
Black, Harvest Wine, Brown and Green , 95 
are the shades, Sizes 4to 8, PRICE $3. 


No Need to use that Shabby Purse when you can 
Purses buy such snappy «tyles 20 reasonable, 


Several shapes to choose from in Black,’ 
Brown and Wine Shades, PRICED AT $1.95 


’ When y there, il t 
Men s Coats sen you see there, you will want one 


nicely tailored from all wool melton 
cloths in Blue or Brown, oy Breasted 


The LePage Store 


SPEC IAL PRICE 
Third St., Medicine Hat 


3, 


FREE OFFER 


Free Initial Notepaper ...on any 
Personal Christmas Card order of 18 
Cards on more from any design in 
samples selling at not less than 
$2.00 Per Doxen. 
THIS OFFER WILL END 
OCTOBER 3ist 


i a lag 


| 


mae 


16th Annual Rotary 


CARNIVAL 
October 12,13,14 


MAJOR PRIZE 
STUDEBAKER CHAMPION SEDAN 


3 Cash Prizes of $25.00 


Each and Special Cash 
Door Prizes, 


Thursday & Friday Nights 


23 Midway Attractions 
Arena, Medicine Hat Oct. 12,13, 14 


Revenue From Carnival Will 
ope Foom Saree i Se Berd & the